manchester road great streets master plan - st. louis county, mo
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MANCHESTER ROADGREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN
St. Louis County, Missour
MASTER PLAN SUMMARY DOCUMENTJanuary 2011
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouriii |
CONSULTANT TEAM
Design Workshop, Inc. / LandscapeArchitecture, Planning
Kurt Culbertson, Principal
Britt Palmberg, Project ManagerNino Pero, Graphic Designer
Kelan Smith, Graphic Designer and Signage /
Waynding
Anna Gagne, Planner / Designer
Ashley Allis, Planner / Designer
Sara Egan, Planner / Designer
Darla Callaway, Planner / Designer
Jason Ferster, Planner / Designer
Melanie Schmidt, Planner / Designer
Izzi Gailey, Project Assistant
Hudson Associates / Public Relations,Community OutreachShelia Hudson
Bridgett Willis
RCLCO / Market and Economic AnalysisAdam Ducker
Shyam Kannan
Nelson Nygaard / Transportation PlanningDavid Fields
Mike King
Rick Chellman
Horner and Shifrin / Civil EngineersGino Bernardez
Ramin Ashrafzadeh
Allan Erdman
ForeSee Consulting / Community Outreachand Chip GameSteve Mullen
Donna Mullen
Clanton Associates / LightingNancy ClantonGregg Adams
Via Partnership / Public ArtMeridith McKinley
GUIDANCE
Manchester Road Great Streets SteeringCommitteeFranz Kraintz, City of Manchester
Barb Beckett, City of Winchester
Tom Aiken, City of BallwinAda Hood, City of Ellisville
Joe Vujnich, City of Wildwood
Maggie Hales, East West Gateway Council of
Governments
Karen Yeomans, Missouri Department of
Transportation
Rick Randall, Pace Properties
Lori Kelling, West St Louis County Chamber of
Commerce
East West Gateway Council of GovernmentsMaggie Hales
Terry Freeland
Mary Grace Lewandowski
Jerry Blair
David Wilson
Les Sterman
Manchester Road Executive CommitteeMark Hadeld, Chair, Elco Chevrolet/Cadillac
Frank Karr, Secretary, Ballwin Planning and Zoning
Commission
Ed Hillhouse, East-West Gateway Council of
Governments
John Bommarito, Bommarito Automotive Group
Rick Randall, Pace Properties
Dave McCartney, Regions Bank
Brent Beumer, Dierbergs
Robert F. Wiegert, Schnucks Markets
Ed Hassinger, MoDot
Chris Marquart, Wal-Mart
Gene Unverfehrt, AmerenUE
Mayor Tim Woerther, City of Wildwood
Robert Kuntz, City of Ballwin
Lori Kelling, West County Chamber of Commerce
Franz Kraintz, City of Manchester
Missouri Department of Transportation
METRO St. Louis
Great Rivers Greenway
Trailnet
St Louis County
Metropolitan St Louis Sewer District
Cover:3D Illustrative of Potential Town Center Development at Clarkson and Manchester in Ellisville.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
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| i
Contents
PROJECT BACKGROUND ......................................................................................................................1
Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Project Organization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3Goals / Client Critical Success Factors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
How the Master Plan Will Be Used . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4Project Timeline and Public Outreach Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
ECONOMICS ANALYSIS .......................................................................................................................... 9
Macroeconomic Trends Impacting Revitalization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10Projected Development Program - 2040 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11Residential . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14Ofce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14Retail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14Town Center Developments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
ILLUSTRATIVE MASTER PLAN ............................................................................................................ 17
Key Recommendations of the Illustrative Master Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18Town Centers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19Integration with Form Based Code . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
TRANSPORTATION ............................................................................................................................... 27
UTILITIES................................................................................................................................................ 55
PARKS AND OPEN SPACE ................................................................................................................... 59
HISTORIC PRESERVATION ................................................................................................................... 69
SIGNAGE AND WAYFINDING ................................................................................................................ 73
STORMWATER ....................................................................................................................................... 81
LIGHTING ...............................................................................................................................................85
PUBLIC ART ........................................................................................................................................... 89
LANDSCAPE PLAN ...............................................................................................................................93
IMPLEMENTATION ................................................................................................................................. 99
APPENDICES (AVAILABLE AS A SEPARATE DOCUMENT)
Appendix A: Prior Studies and Existing ConditionsAppendix B: Planning ProcessAppendix C: TransportationAppendix D: Parks and Open SpaceAppendix E: Signage and WayndingAppendix F: LightingAppendix G: NoiseAppendix H: Public ArtAppendix I: Building Prototypes
Appendix J: Perspective RenderingsAppendix K: Grading PlanAppendix L: Design Workshop Legacy MetricsAppendix M: Keypad Polling ResultsAppendix N: Chip Game Results
Contents
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Project Background | 1
1PROJECT BACKGROUND
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri2 | Project Background
Introduction
Manchester Road, once known as historic Route 66 and now designated as Missouri Route 100,
emerged as one of the leading retail corridors serving the suburban West County area of the St Louis
region between the 1960s and 1980s. Today it represents the Main Street of the ve communities of
Wildwood, Ellisville, Ballwin, Winchester, and Manchester. In recent years, the corridor has lost some
of its prominence as newer and larger shopping areas in the West County area have emerged. The ve
communities launched efforts for the Manchester Road Great Streets Master Plan in order to nd ways
to reinvigorate and improve their Main Street in the coming decades. The specic study area for this
project stretches from Route 141 to Route 109. Between Route 141 and Westglen Farms Drive, the
road is commonly referred to as Manchester Road. Between Westglen Farms Drive and Route 109, it is
referred to as Route 100.
In 2009, Manchester Road was selected as one of four Great Streets Initiative planning projects in the
St Louis region by East/West Gateway Council of Governments (EWG). Since 2005 EWG has been
helping communities in the St. Louis region expand the way they think about and plan streets. The initia-
tive has encouraged local civic and government leaders to think beyond the boundaries of right of ways
and to consider how transportation decisions include the total built environment.
East West Gateway and the ve communities in West County recognize the importance of planning for
streets as community resources, and the St Louis Great Streets Initiative intends to make corridors such
as Manchester Road more than simple conduits for automobile trafc. Great Streets in the St. Louis
region will emphasize all modes of travel, including walking and bicycling. Great Streets will address
and reconsider the auto-centric approach that has dominated roadway design in the region over the last
several decades in order to transform streets into great community resources.
Considering how street design and corridor planning processes affect the pedestrian realm and abutting
land uses is central to the St. Louis Great Streets Initiative. Effectively planning for all modes of travel
requires the careful creation of an environment that suits walking, bicycling, and transit, and it requires
planning for speeds that allow for mobility and commerce while providing safe environments for pedes-trians and bicyclists. Importantly, planning for corridors such as Manchester Road should also consider
the economic health of adjacent land uses and help plan for potential development and redevelopment
that enhances the economies of local communities.
The ve communities along Manchester Road sought to establish the corridor as a Great Street for the
following reasons.
Great Streets are representative of their places. A Great Street reects the neighborhood
through which it passes and has a scale and design appropriate to the character of the abutting
properties and land uses.
Great Streets allow people to walk comfortably and safely. The pedestrian environment alongand near a Great Street corridor is well-designed and well-furnished. The relationship between the
street and adjacent buildings is conducive to all modes of transport and inviting to people.
Great Streets contribute to the economic vitality of the local community. Great Streets facili-
tate the promotion of commerce and the overall economic health of a given town and serve as des-
tinations, not just as transportation facilities. They provide good commercial addresses and provide
locational value to businesses that help to power local economies.
Project Background
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Project Background | 3
Great Streets are functionally complete. Great Streets support mobility and safe and convenient
travel for all of the ground transportation modes: walking, bicycling, personal motor vehicles and
public transportation.
Great Streets facilitate placemaking.Great Streets incorporate places that are memorable and
interesting. These may include plazas, pocket parks, attractive intersections and corners, or simply
improved sidewalks that foster a more active street life.
Great Streets are green. Great Streets provide an attractive and refreshing environment by
working with natural systems. They incorporate environmentally sensitive design standards and
other green development techniques, including the generous provision of street trees and other
plantings and the application of modern stormwater management practices.
The overall intent of the Manchester Road Great Streets Master Plan is to outline a roadmap for short-
term and long-term land use changes and transportation and associated public improvements to the
corridor. The recommendations of the planning effort will inform capital improvement program requests
from each of the ve communities, will guide future transportation projects executed by the Missouri
Department of Transportation (MoDOT) and the ve communities, and will guide local ofcials in future
land use planning and the entitlement of redevelopment projects along the corridor.
Project Organization
East West Gateway worked with the ve communities along the Manchester Road corridor and the
consultant team, led by Design Workshop of Denver, Colorado, to organize and execute the master
planning process for the corridor in 2009 and 2010. As part of this process, a series of committees
guided the consultant team as it worked to complete preliminary and nal recommendations for the
Manchester Road Great Streets Plan.
Steering Committee: This group included city staff from Wildwood, Ellisville, Ballwin, Winchester, and
Manchester, as well as representatives from East-West Gateway Council of Governments, MoDOT staff,
the president of West St. Louis County Chamber of Commerce, and a representative of the Manchester
Road Executive Committee a separate organization comprised of business and community leaders
that has met since 2007 to discuss and advocate for the revitalization of the Manchester Road corridor.
Design Workshop met with the Steering Committee on a weekly basis between September 2009
and June 2010 and conducted a number of separate work sessions with the group at various points
during the project to review draft plans and recommendations for the corridor. The Steering Committee
representatives served as liaisons between the project team, elected ofcials, city staff, and the
residents and businesses along and near the corridor concerning the ongoing planning effort.
Mayors and City Administrators / City Managers Group: The mayors from Wildwood, Ellisville,
Ballwin, Winchester, and Manchester, along with city administrators or city managers from each
municipality, met with the consultant team and East West Gateway on seven occasions between Fall
2009 and Summer 2010 to review the evolving plans and recommendations for the Manchester Road
corridor and offer input. The meetings with mayors, city managers and city administrators, in particular,
focused on developing implementation strategies concerning funding, phasing, governance, and
ongoing administration of the Manchester Road Great Streets Master Plan.
Technical Committees: The consultant team met with a series of Technical Committees (Utilities and
Drainage, Parks and Open Space, and Transportation and Parking) during the Manchester Road project
in order to understand the issues confronting the corridor from the perspective of regulatory agencies
and departments at the municipality, county, and regional levels. The Technical Committees reviewed
preliminary and nal plans for the corridor to provide feedback as the master plan moved toward
completion.
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri4 | Project Background
MoDOT Working Group: Because the Manchester Road corridor doubles as Missouri Route 100 (and
serves as part of the states transportation network), the Missouri Department of Transportation will
continue to have jurisdiction over the road in the future and will have nal authority over improvements
and roadway operations conducted within the right of way. The consultant team and East-West Gateway
met in person with a MoDOT working group from the St. Louis district on a monthly basis throughout
the master planning process to review preliminary ideas concerning access management, transit, and
overall design of Manchester Road and to review preliminary and nal concepts for the ManchesterRoad Great Streets Master Plan.
Relationship Between the Five Communities, St. Louis County, and MoDOT: The ve communities
of Wildwood, Ellisville, Ballwin, Winchester, and Manchester have worked together to inform the
recommendations contained in the Manchester Road Great Streets Master Plan. Because Manchester
Road functions as Missouri Route 100, the Missouri Department of Transportation must approve the
design of any improvements to areas within the right of way of Manchester Road. The consultant team
and the ve communities have coordinated with MoDOT throughout the planning process to ensure that
MoDOTs technical experts have contributed to the nal recommendations of the plan, but MoDOT will
need to ofcially approve the construction plans for public improvements within the right of way going
forward. In addition, while all of the corridor study area falls within the municipal boundaries of the ve
communities, some of the north-south streets that intersect Manchester Road along the corridor are
controlled by St. Louis County Highways and Trafc. The ve communities and MoDOT will need to
coordinate with St. Louis County ofcials regarding the nal design of improvements to these north-
south streets intersecting Manchester Road in the future.
Goals / Client Critical Success Factors
The Design Workshop consultant team identied and conrmed the following Critical Success Factors
for the Manchester Road project with the Steering Committee. These factors reect the results that
should occur for the communities to consider the planning project a success.
The master plan must ensure the strength of the businesses along the corridor and improve the
economic position of the ve communities through realistic solutions.
The Manchester Road Great Streets Master Plan must create a pedestrian environment of higher
aesthetic quality and move trafc efciently and safely through a well-planned access management
strategy.
The planning process must incorporate signicant community outreach and the buy-in of partici-
pants.
The master plan must be implementable and have political and community support. The Great
Streets project must actually make something happen.
The Manchester Road master plan must serve as a model of a Great Street and an example of
how to revitalize suburban retail corridors.
How the Master Plan Will Be Used
The ve communities of Wildwood, Ellisville, Ballwin, Winchester, and Manchester, along with MoDOT,
will use this master plan document as a guide for improvements to the Manchester Road corridor over
the next few decades. The recommendations contained in this master plan will help direct land use and
zoning decisions and the redevelopment strategies of local governments and private sector developers
along the corridor. Recommendations concerning public improvements, including streetscape improve-
ments, changes to streets, landscape improvements, lighting, and related enhancements, will guide the
short-term and long-term planning of the communities with regards to capital improvement projects.
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Project Background | 5
The ve communities may use this document as a supplement or as the basis for amendments to their
comprehensive land use plans and for changes to zoning classications along the corridor. They may
also use the recommendations of this study to alter and potentially streamline and coordinate their
regulations pertaining to zoning, parking, lighting, signage, landscaping, and drainage and grading. The
master plan may also inuence updates and changes to planning documents for this portion of St. Louis
County developed by MoDOT, Metro, and the St. Louis County government. It may inuence intergov-ernmental agreements executed between the ve communities concerning ongoing planning efforts
along the corridor and inuence the documents and execution of any corridor-wide redevelopment enti-
ties formed to coordinate improvements along the corridor going forward.
While the Manchester Road Great Streets Master Plan does not involve the completion of construction
drawings for future improvements or funding for actual construction of improvements, this plan contains
sufcient detail to guide future planning and design over the next few decades.
Project Timeline and Public Outreach Process
The involvement of ve different municipalities along the Manchester Road corridor, the signicant
length of the corridor study area, and the need to maintain a shared sense of planning for the corridor
in the greater West County community heightened the need to execute comprehensive, transparent,
and well-conceived public outreach efforts. The consultant team worked during the planning process to
reach a broad range of participants and to create a consensus concerning the design for the corridor
that will help the ve communities move forward with implementation and construction over time. Dur-
ing the fall, winter, and spring of 2009 2010 the consultant team and East West Gateway met regu-
larly with property owners, business owners, community organizations, elected ofcials, neighborhood
representatives, city staff from the ve communities, various government agencies, and the general
public to advance the recommended design and revitalization strategies for Manchester Road. The team
organized a set of public meetings, focus groups, individual meetings, media communication, and the
latest in online technologies to engage, educate, and solicit continual feedback from the larger com-
munity and to address specic issues impacting various stakeholder groups. In addition to the series ofpublic meetings outlined below, the consultant team worked with local media outlets (including news-
paper, radio, and TV) to publicize the Manchester Road planning effort. It also worked with East West
Gateway Council of Governments to maintain a website for the project as well as Facebook and Twitter
accounts in order to publicize the planning effort and solicit continued input from the public throughout
the process.
October 2009 Initial Stakeholder Outreach: The consultant team met individually with mayors from
each community, various city council members from the ve municipalities, members of the Planning
and Zoning commissions, and city administrators in order to understand the key issues facing the cor-
ridor, their key goals for the project, problems to avoid, and overall ideas for the project and the improve-
ment of the corridor.
November 2009 Initial Public Vision Sessions: The consultant team conducted an initial round of
ve public meetings to gain input from the public concerning overall goals and direction for the Man-
chester Road planning project and to review the results of initial data gathering conducted by the team
during Fall 2009.
December 2009 - Second Public Vision Session and the Chip Game: At a second round of
ve public meetings, the consultant team reviewed input from the public at the November 2009 vision
sessions and presented information and questions concerning a series of potential access manage-
ment and trafc strategies for the Manchester Road corridor. The consultants reviewed the results of a
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri6 | Project Background
market study and development forecast for the 2010 2040 period for the Manchester Road corridor.
Participants then played the Chip Game, an exercise in which members of the public worked togetherto designate where particular land uses should be located along the Manchester Road corridor in 2030.
February 2010 - Review of Alternative Concepts: The consultant team reviewed input provided at the
December 2009 public meetings, including the results of the Chip Game, and presented and solicited
feedback concerning a series of alternative concepts for future land uses and transportation solutions for
the corridor at a series of three public meetings.
The public provided real-time input to the consultant team through keypad polling at each public meeting.
Initial Visioning Session at Morgan Selvidge Middle School in Ballwin, November 19, 2009
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Project Background | 7
March 2010 - Presentation of Preferred Master Plan: The consultant team presented and solicited
feedback concerning the preferred master plan for the corridor, including transportation and land use
recommendations, at a series of three public meetings.
May 2010 - Presentation of Final Manchester Road Great Streets Plan: At a nal round of three
public meetings, the consultant team presented and solicited feedback concerning the nal master plan
exhibits for the corridor, which were developed based upon public input provided at the March 2010
round of public meetings. This round of meetings in particular focused on implementation issues and
solicited feedback concerning whether and how the ve communities should adopt the plan and move
forward with subsequent rounds of planning.
June 2010 Presentation of Draft Manchester Road Corridor Plan document: Design Workshop
presented a draft version of the planning document resulting from the Great Streets effort to the Steering
Committee and the mayors of Wildwood, Ellisville, Ballwin, Winchester, and Manchester for review and
comment.
January 2011 Submittal of Final Planning Documents: The consultant team presented the nal
version of all of the Manchester Road Great Streets Master Plan documents and exhibits to the ve
communities and to East West Gateway Council of Governments, representing the culmination of the
master planning process.
The appendix document contains more detailed information concering the public outreach process, in-
cluding a record of the results of all in-person and online polling questions posed to the public concern-
ing the planning process.
Community members playing
the Chip Game in Ellisville,
December 2009.
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Economics Analysis | 9
2ECONOMICS ANALYSIS
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri10 | Economics Analysis
The Manchester Road corridor study area benets from favorable demographic factors, and a number
of market factors going forward over the next two to three decades should help to bolster prospects
for revitalization in this portion of West County. Overall, the communities along the Manchester Road
corridor exhibited a period of healthy growth between 1990 and 2000 but experienced decreased
population growth over the last ten years. The area had been growing steadily for several decades
as suburban growth continued westward from St. Louis. Over the last ten years, however, most of
the corridor has reached a state of build-out and population growth has been more pronounced inoutlying counties within the metropolitan area. This leveling off of population growth is typical of
maturing suburban areas that have reached build-out and lack available empty land for new greeneld
development.
The Manchester Road study area is relatively afuent, with an estimated 57 percent of all households
in the study area having incomes of greater than $75,000 in 2009. The relative afuence of the corridor
has made the area an attractive location for retail and other real estate investment in the past and
should support ongoing demand over the next few decades. Macroeconomic analysis indicates that
the size of households is decreasing in the ve communities and that the share of older adults (age 55
and over) is increasing across the corridor. A signicant portion (37 percent) of the current households
in the ve communities includes families without children. Short-term economic projections indicate
that, over the ve years between 2009 and 2014, the corridor will continue to experience relatively at
population growth. Smaller, afuent households including persons age 55 and older, as well as younger
professional households including singles and married couples, will account for most of the population
growth over the next ve years.
At the same time the ve communities have approached full build-out, the retail viability of the
Manchester Road corridor has decreased in recent years. Economic analysis indicates that a full 20
percent of the retail space along Manchester Road within the project study area was vacant as of Fall
2009, and an additional 20 percent of the retail space along the corridor was being used for service uses
that do not produce sales tax revenues for the ve communities (including banks, attorneys, nail and
barber shops, and other service uses).
The decrease in sales tax dollars from retail uses along Manchester Road has signicantly impacted
the budgets of the cities along the corridor. The consultant team urges the ve communites to use the
master planning process to encourage revitalization along the corridor and therefore safeguard the ve
communities from scal decline and decay.
The Appendix document contains additional information and details concerning the existing economic
conditions along the Manchester Road corridor.
Macroeconomic Trends Impacting Revitalization
Based upon economic analysis of the St. Louis market and anticipated regional and national trends in
economics and real estate, the consultant team identied the following key drivers for the revitalizationof the Manchester Road corridor.
The regional St. Louis economy will recoup the job losses of the recent recession by 2012 and
continue to expand the overall job base in the metropolitan area through 2020.
The number of ofce-using jobs in the Manchester Road study area will increase by 2,000
between 2009 and 2020, increasing demand for Class A ofce space. The revitalization of the
Manchester Road corridor should include Class A ofce space in order to absorb expected job
growth in the area as well as the relocation of companies from elsewhere in the St. Louis area
Economics Analysis
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Economics Analysis | 1
seeking somewhat lower priced ofce space along the corridor in comparison to higher-priced ofce
submarkets in St. Louis County.
The trend toward smaller household sizes and larger numbers of Empty Nester and younger adult
households in the corridor study area will drive demand for smaller, lower-maintenance residential
units, including attached townhomes, patio homes, condominiums, and apartments.
Projected Development Program - 2040
The gures below outline the anticipated development program for the year 2040 (30 years out) for the
Manchester Road study area, as well as the anticipated phasing of development for different product
types by different time periods (2010-2019, 2020-2029, and 2030-2039).
As indicated, the total overall square footage of retail space along the corridor will decrease over
the next few decades, as land use diversies to include additional residential and ofce space. Theconsultant team anticipates that mixed-use development, including two or more real estate types, such
as residential combined with retail, will comprise a large share of new development along Manchester
Road. The following summarizes the development program and recommendations for development
strategies for residential, retail, and ofce uses over the next three decades.
Simply put, the Manchester Road Corridor today has far more acreage zoned for retail than the
market can support, either today or over the next three decades. Therefore, the development program
suggests the communities pursue mixed-use zoning to allow other uses (including ofce and residential)
along the corridor in the future.
Annual Change in Households by Age of Householder by Income - Manchester Road Study Area - 2009 to 2014Figure 12:
Income Range
15 - 24 25 - 34 35 - 44 45 - 54 55 - 64 65 Plus TOTAL
Total
Ann.
Rate Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number
Less Than $15,000 -2 -0.20% 9 2.40% -61 -8.40% -33 -11.10% -6 -0.40% -4 -0.10% -97 -1
$15,000 - $24,999 -14 -4.20% -4 -0.80% -60 -12.80% -35 -7.70% -10 -0.90% -21 -0.50% -144 -2
$25,000 - $34,999 -42 -5.60% 9 0.90% -137 -13.50% -82 -6.10% -24 -1.60% 82 2.40% -194 -2$35,000 - $49,999 12 1.30% -10 -0.40% -164 -7.90% -189 -4.70% -12 -0.40% 27 0.50% -336 -1
$50,000 - $74,999 35 3.30% 216 4.80% -656 -10.70% -312 -2.90% -46 -0.60% 255 3.80% -508 -1
$75,000 - $99,999 22 6.10% 194 5.10% -465 -7.50% -234 -2.50% 145 2.00% 240 6.60% -98 -0
$100,000 - $124,999 25 18.30% 192 7.40% -331 -6.90% -197 -0.90% 192 3.60% 168 6.60% 49 0
$125,000 - $149,999 3 4.60% 171 10.50% -107 -3.70% -54 2.40% 168 4.50% 137 8.60% 318 2
$150,000 or more 5 299 -253 424 512 277 1,264
TOTAL --> 44 1,076 -2,234 -712 919 1,161 254
Annual Rate of
Change
0.90% 5.40% -7.40% -1.50% 2.40% 3.60% 0.10%
Land Use
ExistingDevelopment
Program, 2040 Net Change
Square Feet
/ Units Acres
Square Feet /
Units Acres
Square Feet /
Units Acres
Retail (including Auto
Dealerships)
4,480,000 SF 758 3,052,000 SF 371 - 1,428,000 SF -387
Ofce 130,000 SF 23 910,000 SF 48 780,000 SF 25
Hotel 112 rooms 5 552 rooms 22 440 rooms 17
Residential 833 units 157 3,893 units 421 3,060 units 264
TOTAL 943 862 -81
Land Use BreakdownFigure 13:
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri
Product Type by Ph
Product Description
PHASE 1 - 2010 - 2019 PHASE 2 - 2020 - 2029 PHASE 3 - 2030 - 2039 TOTAL
Total Demand Total Demand Total Demand
Dwelling
Units /
Acre
Floor to Area
Ratio (FAR) Units Square Feet
Dwelling
Units / Acre
Floor to Area
Rat io (FAR) Unit s
Square
Feet
Dwelling
Units /
Acre
Floor to
Area Ratio
(FAR) Units
Square
Feet Units
S
For Sale Residential Single Family Detached 6.0 202 6.6 209 7.3 311 722
For Sale Residential Townhome (20 Ft Lot) 14.0 80 15.4 149 16.9 200 429
For Sale Residential Townhome (24 Ft Lot) 12.0 122 13.2 100 14.5 192 414
For Rent Residential Garden Apartments 25.0 396 27.5 0 30.3 0 396
For Rent Residential Mid-Rise Above Retail 35.0 38.5 287 42.4 200 487
For Rent Residential Mid Rise 35.0 38.5 200 42.4 405 605
Retail Unanchored In-Line 0.3 0.3 40,000 0.3
Retail Anchored In-Line 0.6 0.7 120,000 0.7 1
Retail Lifestyle Mixed-Use 1.5 325,000 1.7 1.8 300,000 6
Retail Large-Format 0.3 100,000 0.3 0.3 100,000 2
Ofce Medical Ofce 0.5 0.6 300,000 0.6 100,000 4
Ofce Ofce Above Retail 1.5 1.7 50,000 1.8 30,000
Ofce Mid-Rise 0.5 0.6 150,000 0.6 150,000 3
Hotel Mid-Rise 35.0 38.5 220 42.4 220 440
12
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Economics Analysis | 13
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri14 | Economics Analysis
Residential
The development program includes a sizeable portion of housing units geared to smaller household
types (including higher density but detached single family homes).
A large portion of the for-sale demand will include homes priced under $150,000, and for-rent unitswill lease for under $1,250 per month in order to appeal to a wider cross-section of the St. Louis
area market.
Residential units should integrate with mixed-use developments such as town centers in order
to enjoy increased sales and proximity to shopping, entertainment, and civic uses. Mixed-
use developments such as town centers may include horizontal as well as vertical mixed use.
Town centers and other mixed-use developments should carefully integrate residential uses
with surrounding ofce, retail, and civic uses through walkways, side streets, and open space
connections.
Ofce
The ofce market along the Manchester Road corridor will benet from modest regional job growth,
the build-out of nearby employment centers along Interstates 64 and 270, the ongoing aging and
obsolescence of ofce properties in West County, the relatively lower lease rates along Manchester
Road compared to other submarkets in West County, and potential demand for medical ofce space
along the corridor, driven by the signicant population of aging Baby Boomers.
Over the next 30 years, the study area will add 780,000 square feet of ofce space to an existing
base of only 130,000 square feet, including Class A medical ofce space, ofce space above retail,
and mid-rise speculative space.
The Manchester Road corridor in particular has an opportunity to develop higher quality medical
ofce space to serve the areas aging population. The status of many of the communities in West
County as bedroom communities for executives and business leaders will create demand for
additional mid-rise ofce space in the future.
Ofce space integrated with town center retail and other uses will particularly appeal to tenants that
rely on customer trafc, including accountants, lawyers, and insurance agents.
Retail
By reducing the total retail space in the study area by 30 percent over the next 30 years and
arranging retail in town center or Main Street areas that emphasize quality over quantity, the ve
communities should be able to collect additional sales tax dollars per square foot over time.
The overall St. Louis retail market is oversupplied. By focusing on creating quality, well plannedretail and town center developments, the ve communities can create a more sustainable economic
environment and scal situation over the next three decades. Without signicant investment
in placemaking, retail centers along Manchester Road will likely continue to struggle to remain
competitive in the local and regional market.
The recommended development program assumes the communities will create a series of mixed-
use, town center-oriented retail destinations over time, and the revitalization of the corridor will
include construction of 985,000 square feet of new retail over the next 30 years.
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Economics Analysis | 15
The projected construction of new retail space will include unanchored in-line retail (4 percent),
anchored in-line retail (13 percent), mixed-use / lifestyle retail (63 percent), and large format or big
box retail (20 percent). The term unanchored in-line retail refers to smaller stores typically found
in a shopping center along a major arterial. Mixed-use or lifestyle retail will likely locate in or near
town center developments.
Town Center Developments
The ve communities have a signicant opportunity to create destinations and developments that
are more attractive to residents, retailers, restauranteurs, and employers than typical suburban
developments. Over a 30 year period the Manchester Road study area could support the creation
of up to three new regional-serving town center nodes, as well as continue the expansion and build-
out of the existing Wildwood Town Center.
In addition, the corridor could support the addition of local-serving retail areas adjacent to these
town center nodes that would include lower-density development programs.
In order to be successful, the town center nodes must consist of retail offerings as well as higher
density housing alternatives (such as townhomes and especially multi-family apartments) thatcreate an additional consumer base for local retail sales.
The town center areas should also include some degree of ofce space, including both traditional
ofce as well as medical ofce, to create additional demand for retail and restaurants during
business hours.
Ongoing public input and zoning and land use decisions made by the ve communities will help to
determine the exact locations and design for various nodes of development (including town centers)
along the Manchester Road corridor.
To summarize, the overall goal of creating distinct and vibrant town centers along the corridor should
guide the ve municipalities as they move forward with planning for the Manchester Road corridor and
their overall communities in the future. The Great Streets planning effort revealed that creating more
distinct town centers along Manchester Road will improve the livability of the communities and benet
them from a scal perspective. The Implementation section discusses the potential scal impact on the
ve communities in greater detail.
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Illustrative Master Plan | 17
3ILLUSTRATIVE MASTER PLAN
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri18 | Illustrative Master Plan
The Illustrative Master Plan depicted on the foldout sheets reects the nal master plan for the
Manchester Road corridor, based upon input from the public throughout the planning effort and input
from the Steering Committee, the Technical Committees, MoDOT, East-West Gateway, and mayors and
other city ofcials in the ve communities.
The Illustrative Plan depicts the vision for the eventual redevelopment and transformation of the
Manchester Road corridor over the next thirty years. The communities along the corridor expectchanges to occur in phases over time, depending on economic factors and the availability of funding
for public improvements such as streets, landscaping, and other civic amenities. The layout and
orientation of buildings and roadways on the plan is intended to be purely illustrative of how various
parcels could be redeveloped or revitalized under the recommendations of the plan. Deviations from
the Illustrative Plan are anticipated and expected by the ve communities. The Illustrative Plan does not
recommend the immediate removal or renovation of any existing land use, building, or business along
the corridor. The incorporation of existing uses along Manchester Road into redevelopment projects
and revitalization plans may be encouraged. The planning effort assumed that almost every parcel and
land use along Manchester Road (with the exception of churches and other existing civic destinations
such as city hall buildings) would redevelop in some way over the next 30 years. Over the last thirty
years, major redevelopment projects along the corridor have included Manchester Highlands and the
Ballwin Town Center. However, the extent of redevelopment will, again, depend on economic conditions
and government policies toward development.
The majority of the buildings along the Manchester Road corridor are over 20 years old and largely
obsolete. Therefore, even without intervention through this master plan, the normal actions of the
market will result in the reconstruction of the corridor over time. As this process naturally occurs, the
master plan provides the opportunity to dene the form of the future community.
The Illustrative Master Plan provides a vision for how the economic and transportation recommendations
of the master planning effort will translate into changes along the corridor over the next thirty years.
The ve communities will continue working to determine how to incorporate the Illustrative Master
Plan and the recommendations of the planning effort into public policies, including changes to zoning,
Comprehensive Plan amendments, and changes to development regulations.
Key Recommendations of the Illustrative Master Plan
The red and orange colors for buildings depicted on the Illustrative Plan diagramtically illustrate the
potential locations of town center areas (in red) and for neighborhood districts along the corridor (in
orange).
Based upon input from the planning effort and the recommendations of the economic analysis, the
Illustrative Plan assumes that both town center areas (in red) and neighborhood districts (in orange)
could include a mixture of different land uses (including residential, retail, ofce, or civic uses),
rather than merely retail uses.The Illustrative Plan does not represent the nal, agreed-upon location for town centers and
neighborhood districts (in red and orange). Further planning efforts by the ve communities will
further rene the locations for town centers, versus neighborhood districts.
The concept of town center areas (described below) resulted from input from the public during the
planning process and input from the consultant team, elected ofcials, and city ofcials.
The Illustrative Plan provides recommendations concerning the recommended location of
landscape and open space areas along the corridor, including open space corridors along some of
the major drainages in the study area such as Fishpot Creek and Grand Glaize Creek.
Illustrative Master Plan
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Illustrative Master Plan | 19
The Illustrative Plan denotes the potential locations for future streets, transportation connections,
and access to and from Manchester Road. The Transportation section provides greater detail
concerning these recommendations.
Subsequent sections provide more detailed recommendations from the master plan concerning
Transportation, Parks and Open Space connections and amenities, Public Art, and other elements.
Town Centers
Traditional zoning in the United States, in the St. Louis region, and along the Manchester Road corridor
separates uses (such as retail, residential, and ofce) into distinct zoning classications for commercial,
ofce, and residential uses. The strict separation of all uses, however, has limited connectivity between
neighborhoods, shopping areas, and places of employment so signicantly that many suburbs today
lack a sense of place. In an effort to create more vibrant destinations that integrate places to live,
shop, and work and serve as gathering places for everyone, many suburbs nationwide over the
last decade have moved toward mixed-use zoning and the creation of new town centers. Many
communities have found that by allowing retail, ofce, and residential uses in the same development or
in close proximity to each other, new developments have fared better in the market and created more
desirable destinations for residents and visitors.
Input from the citizens in the Manchester Road area during the various rounds of public meetings for
the Great Streets project expressed support for the creation of a series of distinct town centers along
the Manchester Road corridor. The Illustrative Plan for the Manchester Road corridor evolved during
the series of public meetings with the ideas of districts, including town centers, in mind. Participants in
meetings and online surveys understood that town centers could include a mixture of uses, integrated
either horizontally or vertically. The public expressed support for future land use planning that denotes
key community gathering places and nodes of more intense activity at the town center locations.
In the initial round of public meetings in November 2009, participants expressed strong support for
the creation of a distinct set of town centers, similar to the downtown Kirkwood district. During theChip Game exercises in December 2009, participants indicated a preference for town centers at key
intersections and destinations along the Manchester Road corridor. During the February 2010 public
meetings participants expressed a preference for the eventual creation of four town center nodes of
development along the corridor (in Wildwood, Ellisville, Ballwin, and Manchester). Feedback during
the March and May 2010 public meetings again expressed support for the creation of four mixed-use
town center nodes along the corridor, and for the promotion of mixed-use development throughout the
corridor study area.
The following summarizes the key recommendations of the Manchester Road Great Streets Master Plan
for town centers:
The existing Wildwood Town Center would continue to develop as a town center serving the
Wildwood community and surrounding areas of West St. Louis County.
A town center could develop in the vicinity of Clarkson and Manchester in Ellisville to take
advantage of the north-south access of Clarkson and Kiefer Roads. This town center should
include open space connections with Bluebird Park to the south and would include key civic
amenities such as the Ellisville City Hall.
A town center could develop in the area generally between Holloway and Ries / Seven Trails along
Manchester Road in Ballwin. This town center should include open space connections with Vlasis
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri20 | Illustrative Master Plan
Park and the Ballwin Athletic Association and would include the Ballwin City Hall and other civic
amenities.
A town center could develop between Baxter / Sulphur Spring Road and Route 141 in Manchester,
generally including the historic portion of Manchester along Manchester Road. This town center
would include open space connections and amenities along Grand Glaize Creek, the existing
Manchester City Hall, and could include space for the Manchester Athletic Association.
The Illustrative Plan does not include a town center development specically in the community of
Winchester. The size and location of town centers in the Illustrative Plan resulted from public input
during the planning process as well as input from the consultant team concerning the viability for
town center development in the corridor study area. Given its close proximity to the town centers
in the Ballwin and Manchester areas, the Winchester area did not contain sufcient market demand
for a signicant town center. The Illustrative Plan suggests the integration of various land uses in
the Winchester area (including retail, ofce, residential, and civic uses such as a city hall), but does
not call for the creation of a separate town center. In addition, the City of Winchester includes only
around a quarter mile of frontage along the south side of Manchester Road. This frontage would
not provide sufcient space to locate a town center development.
While the real estate market will determine the exact mix of product types and densities for the
town centers, the consultant team recommends, based upon experience in other markets and the
dynamics of the local real estate market, that the four town centers along Manchester Road develop
at densities of 18 to 25 residential dwelling units per acre. Developing town centers of this density
or greater would provide sufcient demand for neighborhood-serving retail in the town centers and
would support the development of mass transit options along the corridor (as described further in
the Transportation section).
Integration with Form Based Code
In order to more formally articulate the vision and recommended design guidelines for the town centers
and other districts along the Manchester Road corridor, the consultant team introduced the concept of
Form Based Codes to the Steering Committee and the general public in West County. Form Based
Codes (FBCs) outline recommended development for a given area in terms of anticipated levels of
intensity or densication, rather than in terms of strict guidelines for specic land uses. FBCs usually
include a range of districts, denoted as transects, ranging from less intense development to more
intense development.
The corridor study area includes three potential transects tied to the vision illustrated in the Illustrative
Master Plan.
T-5 Town Center This transect includes areas of greater intensity and greater potential density (for
homes, businesses and ofces) in and around the town center locations (in Wildwood, Ellisville, Ballwin,
and Manchester). The T-5 transect includes a total of nearly 900 acres within the Manchester Road
corridor study area.
T-4 Neighborhood District - Includes most of the lands located between the Town Centers. The T-4
transect may include a variety of mixtures and arrangements of retail, residential, and ofce uses.
However, the T-4 transect anticipates a lower level of density compared to T-5. The T-4 transect
includes a total of 683 acres.
T-3 Sub-Urban transect - Includes a total of 100 acres along the fringes of the study area, located in
most cases a block or more to the north or south of Manchester Rd. The T-3 transect may include retail,
commercial, residential, and ofce uses, but calls for more neighborhood-oriented streets, anticipates
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Illustrative Master Plan | 2
less trafc and less density, and tends to include more residential than commercial uses. Many older
neighborhoods in American cities resemble the T-3 transect. Older residences dominate the districts,
but at select street corners or locations smaller retail or ofce buildings provide for amenities and
services to residents.
Although Form Based Codes allow for a greater diversity of uses compared to traditional suburban
zoning, they provide more specic guidance concerning the physical form of the various districts for civicleaders and the private sector. The codes for the different transects articulate how buildings relate to
the street, stipulations for setbacks from the street to buildings, the allowable types of streets in a given
district, and rules concerning allowable uses in the district. The intent of the codes is to provide greater
clarity to builders and developers as they proceed with projects, reducing confusion and overhead for
all parties involved. Form Based Codes intend to help create districts that retain their urban design over
many decades, as tenants and individual businesses come and go. The distinctive feel of particular
town centers, for example, would remain as generations pass, thereby creating a real sense of place for
the community.
As discussed further in the Implementation section, the consultant team recommends that the
communities adopt Form Based Codes in order to create their own distinct districts or town centers that
will stand the test of time. The consultant team prepared a comprehensive set of recommendations and
graphics associated with the Form Based Code as a separate document from the Master Plan book. It
is recommended that citizens and civic leaders consult the Form Based Code book in order to better
understand how the proposed codes may guide development along the Manchester Road corridor in the
future.
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri
Illustrative Master Plan - Western Segm
,
TaylorRd.
ForestLeafPkwy.
HutchinsonRd.
Macklin Dr.
OldStateRd.
PretoriaDr.
WeisAve.
Kiefe
rC
ree
kRd
.
ClarksonRd.
VesperDr.
OakHillDr.
Ellisville TowneCentre Dr.
Ruck
Rd.
Trum
anRd.
Manche
sterRd.
TartanG
reenBlvd.
WestglenFarm
sDr.
EathertonRd.
Eatherto
nRd.
O-1
09
MO-100
StreckerRd.
Potential Park
Area - 50 Offset
from Floodplain
Potential Park
Area - 50 Offset
from Floodplain
Civic BuildingSub Urban and Neighborhood District Area
Buildings
Town Center Area Buildings
Parks/Open Space
22
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri
Illustrative Master Plan - Eastern Segm
t i n t r t ,t l
. i n
rth t
MarElCt.
FlesherDr.
HillsdaleDr.
MimosaLn.
VlasisDr.
NewBa
llwinRd.
SteamboatLn.
ShirleyLn.
RamseyLn.
BallparkD
r.
HollowayRd
.
Rie
sRd
.
MapleLn.
LindyBlvd.
HenryAve.
OldMeramecStatio
nRd.
OldSulphurSpring
Rd.
SulphurSpringRd.
BaxterRd.
Seven
TrailsD
r.
KehrsMillRd.
OldBallwinRd.
Re
inkeRd.
E.
MeadowLn.
Potential Park
Area - 50 Offset
from Floodplain
Potential Park
Area - 50 Offset
from Floodplain
W. Orchard Ave.
JeffersonAve.
Larkh
illLn.
RobinH
illLn.
TimkaDr.
LockDr.
PleasantViewDr.
SolleyDr.
SanSouciDr.
Amitie Ln.
CreveCouerAve.
John Mo
Ballwin Athletic
Association
VlasisParkDr.
FishPotCreek
GrandGlaizeCreek
Civic Building
Sub Urban and Neighborhood District Area
Buildings
Town Center Area Buildings
Parks/Open Space
23
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri
Recommended Transects Along the Manchester Road Corridor - Western Segm
TaylorRd. W
estglenFarms
Dr.
ForestLeafPkwy.
HutchinsonRd.
Macklin Dr.
OldState
Rd.
CovertL
n.
Pretoria
Dr.
WeisAve.
Kiefe
rC
ree
kR
d.
ClarksonRd.
VesperDr.
OakHillDr.
WesthillsP
ark
Dr.
Streck
erRd
.
Ruck
Rd.
Truma
nRd.
TartanG
reenBlvd.
MO
-109
TaylorRd. W
estglenFarms
Dr.
ForestLeafPkwy.
HutchinsonRd.
Macklin Dr.
OldState
Rd.
CovertLn.
Pretoria
Dr.
WeisAve.
Kiefe
rC
ree
kR
d.
ClarksonRd.
VesperDr.
OakHillDr.
WesthillsP
ark
Dr.
Streck
erRd
.
Ruck
Rd.
Truma
nRd.
TartanG
reenBlvd.
MO
-109
1/8mile
radiu
s
1/4mile
radiu
s
1/2mile
radiu
s
1mile
1/8m
ileradiu
s
1/4mile
radiu
s
1/2mile
radiu
s
1/8mile
radiu
s
1/4mile
radiu
s
1/2mile
radiu
s
1/8mile
radiu
s
1/4mile
radiu
s
1/2mile
radiu
s
1mile
1/8m
ileradiu
s
1/4mile
radiu
s
1/2mile
radiu
s
1/8mile
radiu
s
1/4mile
radiu
s
1/2mile
radiu
s
Gambrill United MethodistRetirement Community
WildwoodTown Center
Gambrill United MethodistRetirement Community
WildwoodTown Center
Municipal Boundary
Existing Building
Proposed Building
Existing- Civic Building
T-3 Sub-Urban
T-4 NeighborhoodDistrict
T-5 Town Center
Park/Open Space
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MANCHESTER ROAD GREAT STREETS MASTER PLAN | St. Louis County, Missouri
Recommended Transects Along the Manchester Road Corridor - Eastern Segm
MarElCt.
FlesherDr.
HighviewDr.
HillsdaleDr.
MimosaLn.
VlasisDr.
N
ewBallwinRd.
BirchwoodDr.
SteamboatLn.
ShirleyLn.
RamseyLn.
HollowayRd
.
BallparkD
r.
Rie
sRd
.
LarkHillLn.
SpringOaksDr.
MapleLn.
LindyBlvd.
Sulfu
rSpringRd.
OldMeramecStationR
d.
OldSulphurSpringRd.
BaxterR
d.
Lakeside Dr.ParkLn.
LockDr.
TimkaDr.
Seven
TrailsD
r.
KehrsMillRd.
OldBallwinRd.
ReinkeRd.
E.
MeadowLn.
MO-141
MarElCt.
FlesherDr.
HighviewDr.
HillsdaleDr.
MimosaLn.
VlasisDr.
N
ewBallwinRd.
BirchwoodDr.
SteamboatLn.
ShirleyLn.
RamseyLn.
HollowayRd
.
BallparkD
r.
Rie
sRd
.
LarkHillLn.
SpringOaksDr.
MapleLn.
LindyBlvd.
Sulfu
rSpringRd.
OldMeramecStationR
d.
BaxterR
d.
Lakeside Dr.ParkLn.
LockDr.
TimkaDr.
Seven
TrailsD
r.
KehrsMillRd.
OldBallwinRd.
ReinkeRd.
E.
MeadowLn.
MO-141
OldSulphurSpringRd.
1/2mile
radiu
s
1/2m
ileradiu
s
1mile
radiu
s
1/8mile
radiu
s
1/4mile
radiu
s
1/8mile
radiu
s
1/8mileradius
1/4mile
radiu
s
1mile
radiu
s
adius
1/4mileradius
1/2mileradius
1mileradius
1/2mile
radiu
s
1/2m
ileradiu
s
1mile
radiu
s
1/8mile
radiu
s
1/4mile
radiu
s
1/8mile
radiu
s
1/8mileradius
1/4mile
radiu
s
1mile
radiu
s
adius
1/4mileradius
1/2mileradius
1mileradius
ManchesterMethodistChurch
City Hall
FireStationLafayette Center
Winchester Plaza
St. JohnEvangelicalChurch ofManchester
UnitedMethodistChurch
LafatetteChurch
ofChrist
BallwinPost Office
Ellisville Plaza
ManchesterMethodistChurch
City Hall
FireStationLafayette Center
Winchester Plaza
St. JohnEvangelicalChurch ofManchester
UnitedMethodistChurch
LafatetteChurch
ofChrist
BallwinPost Office
Ellisville Plaza
Municipal BounExisting Buildin
Proposed Build
Existing- Civic B
T-3 Sub-Urban
T-4 NeighborhoDistrict
T-5 Town Cente
Park/Open Spa25
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